You’ve just dredged up a core memory! I can’t believe they’re still around and I haven’t used a CD drive in so long that I’ve forgotten that no-CD patches were a thing.
こんにちは
You’ve just dredged up a core memory! I can’t believe they’re still around and I haven’t used a CD drive in so long that I’ve forgotten that no-CD patches were a thing.
Everyone loves ultra-violence, right?
It’s like a fancy list.
The beauty of open source software =)
What if the chip dies? How am I gonna be able to get my stuff?
You can have backup keys, but if you don’t have that then your data is gone.
I don’t fully understand how it works, but where is the encryption saved? On the chip itself or somewhere else?
Encryption key is stored in the TPM chip.
I used a kindle keyboard for a long time and I think the new front lit ones are a big improvement, especially in low light (I use a kindle oasis.) I can’t speak for sync improvements though since I keep it completely offline and transfer everything though calibre.
Have you tried with a stock kernel instead of zen?
And windows doesn’t support virtio video, use qxl.
Tap water and a bath towel.
Personally? I hate it.
Anytime I have to deal with it I usually just write a bash script that writes a horrific unrolled powershell script rather than dealing with ps data structures.
In powershell, kinda – but it’s unpleasant. Everything is an object which you pipe between commands, but it’s not a text stream so the receiving end has to explicitly understand what it’s receiving.
Chaotic good here. They have different DPI too so you’re never quite sure where your mouse is going to end up.
Lettuce alone is sufficient, but not necessary. As soon as you omit lettuce it takes multiple ingredients.
Better than counting curly braces.
The AUR is for Arch and trying to use it on a different distro will have mixed results at best.
You can either wait for Manjaro to catch up and add the glib2-devel package which was created over a month ago, or edit the plgbuild and change it to glib2